Converting parts per million (ppm) and mol of ions

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The discussion focuses on converting concentrations of fluoride and other compounds in water. For a fluoride concentration of 0.90 ppm, it is clarified that this equates to 0.90 grams of fluoride per million grams of water, leading to a calculation of approximately 4.74 x 10^-8 moles of fluoride in 1 gram of water. Participants also address how to calculate the amount of fluoride ions consumed when drinking 200 ml of water, emphasizing the need to convert moles to the number of ions using Avogadro's number. Additionally, there are discussions on converting molarity to ppm for Ca(OH)2 and calculating the mol of ions in K2SO4, while also touching on the importance of chewing antacid tablets before swallowing. The conversation highlights the significance of understanding units and proper calculations in chemistry.
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1. Fluorine compounds are added to water, the concentration being 0.90 ppm.

a. What amount of fluoride present 1.0g of water?

Solution- (just need to know what the number mean)

Divided 0.90 pm by 1,000,000, which I assume is the grams of substance per kilogram?

Then divided that number by fluorines molar mass (19) to get the answer of 4.7x10^-8

b. How much fluoride ions would you swallow if you drank 200ml water?

2. Convert 0.00036M (molarity) of Ca(OH)2 to ppm

Solution- I found the molar mass of the compound being ~74

3. For 0.20M of K2SO4, calculate mol of K+ ions, Sulfate ions and oxygen atoms

Solution - Molar mass I found to be ~174

4. Why should antacid tables be chewed before being swallowed?

5. Find concentration of vitamin c in g L^-1 when 40mg/100ml and do same for carbonhydrate at 8.5g/100ml

Solution- I'm guessing I just divided 40mg/100ml and 8.5g/0.1L but not sure if this makes sense?
 
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Any help would be appreciated...
 
For #1, ppm means parts per million. If fluoride is added to water to make a concentration of .9 ppm, that means that there are .9g of fluoride per million grams of water. The amount of fluoride in 1 g. of water would be .9/1,000,000 * 1 g.

For #4, what would be the effect of chewing up antacid tablets (not tables) before swallowing them?
 
Mark44 said:
For #1, ppm means parts per million. If fluoride is added to water to make a concentration of .9 ppm, that means that there are .9g of fluoride per million grams of water. The amount of fluoride in 1 g. of water would be .9/1,000,000 * 1 g.

For #4, what would be the effect of chewing up antacid tablets (not tables) before swallowing them?

Hey thanks!

Could you help me with the 200ml question? I figured out all the rest
 
ScienceNewb said:
b. How much fluoride ions would you swallow if you drank 200ml water?

I'm not sure what you mean by "how much fluoride ions." This is ambiguous, as it could mean the actual number of fluoride ions or it could be the volume. If you're interested in the volume, the concentration of fluoride ion is .9/1,000,000, so multiply that ratio by the volume of water, 200 ml, to get the volume of fluoride ion.
 
Mark44 said:
I'm not sure what you mean by "how much fluoride ions." This is ambiguous, as it could mean the actual number of fluoride ions or it could be the volume. If you're interested in the volume, the concentration of fluoride ion is .9/1,000,000, so multiply that ratio by the volume of water, 200 ml, to get the volume of fluoride ion.

I think it means the number of ions, the answer at the back is 5.7 times 10^18
 
From something you said in the first post, the .9 PPM is the concentration by mass. PPM is NOT the number of grams per kg. That would be parts per thousand.

1 PPM would be 1 microgram (one millionth of a gram) of whatever in a gram of the substance it's in.

When you did problem 1a you had .9/1,000,000 * 1 g * 1 mole/19 g = 4.74 x 10-8 moles of Fluoride.

To get the number of molecules, multiply the number of moles by Avogadro's number, which IIRC is 6.022 x 1023.

That will give you the number of Fl molecules in 1 g. of fluoridated water. Take that number an multiply by the number of grams of water in 200 ml.

It's been a very long while since I've done these calculations, so I'm a little rusty, but I don't think I'm steering you wrong.

As a tip, be sure to put units in - otherwise it's very easy to get an answer that's meaningless.
 
Mark44 said:
I'm not sure what you mean by "how much fluoride ions." This is ambiguous, as it could mean the actual number of fluoride ions or it could be the volume.

Volume? No, it is either number of moles or number of ions.

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methods
 
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